• Title of article

    Particle Arrestance Modeling Within Fibrous Porous Media

  • Author/Authors

    Giuliani، James نويسنده , , Vafai، Kambiz نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
  • Pages
    -154
  • From page
    155
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    In this two-part paper, lime-accurate solutions of the Reynolds-averaged NavierStokes equations arc presented, which address through model problems, the response of turbulent propeller-blade boundaryʹ foyers and wakes to external-flow traveling waves. In Part 1, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology flapping-foil experiment was simulated and the resuits validated through comparisons with data. The response was shown to be significantly more complex than classical unsteady boundary layer and unsteady lifting flows thus motivating further study, in Part 2. the effects of frequency, waveform, and foil geometry are investigated. The results demonstrate that uniquely different response occurs for low and high frequency. High-frequency response agrees with behavior seen in the flapping-foil experiment, whereas lowfrequency response displays a temporal behavior which more. closely agrees with classical inviscid-flow theories. Study of waveform and geometry show that, for high frequency, the driving mechanism of the response is a viscous-inviscid interaction created by a near-wake peak in [he displacement thickness which, in turn, is directly related to unsteady lift and the oscillatory wake sheet. Pressure waves radiate upstream and downstream of the displacement thickness peak for high frequency flows. Secondary effects, which are primarily due to geometry, include gust deformation due to steady-unsteady interaction and trailing-edge counter-rotating vortices which create a two-layered amplitude and phase-angle profile across the boundary layer.
  • Keywords
    Fiber orientation , cellulose fiber , Microstructure , fracture toughness
  • Journal title
    Transactions of the ASME: Journal of Fluids Engineering
  • Serial Year
    1999
  • Journal title
    Transactions of the ASME: Journal of Fluids Engineering
  • Record number

    10237